United States, (1881-1975)
Butchering Day
- High through the sky see the homing birds sailing —
- It’s butchering time
- Frost on the fences, on picket and paling —
- Hear the weird winter wind whining and wailing,
- The warmth and the daylight are flitting and
- failing —
- It’s hog-killing time.
- The season of feasting has come with the fall,
- And the digging of yams.
- The corn-fattened oxen are sleek in the stall
- And the hogs are all hams.
- The hands of the harvest have come from their
- toiling,
- They’ve set the black pot full of water a-boiling,
- There’s a jangle of knives and the whetstone they’re
- oiling —
- It’s butchering time.
- The women have laid down their sewin’ and stitchin’,
- There’s a stir in the place
- And their laughter and chatter reflects from the kitchen —
- The joy of the chase.
- For old primal passions are stirring again,
- And a wave of the cave-dweller days on their ken
- Lures them keen on the blood-sprinkled trail of the men —
- At butchering time.
- The porker is squealing the pangs of his fear,
- For the chase has grown hot.
- His cry is like music to every ear,
- It’s a flash of the cave man pursuing the deer,
- It’s the lusty and blood-shedding time of the year,
- And the moment of rapture and capture is here —
- There’s the sound of a shot
- The prey has gone down and the men with a shout
- Plunge a knife in its heart and the life gurgles out,
- In the old feeding lot.
- And the women come out with a smile on each face
- To their part in the task
- As our foremothers followed the men to the chase
- In an age that is hid in the hazes of space
- And Time’s motionless mask.
- But we know that the past surges back in our veins
- At the terrified cry,
- And the fever of conquest lights up in our brains,
- And the blood-lust in eye;
- And the best day of all, in the lap of the fall
- With its multifold charm,
- In the thick of the fray upon butchering day —
- On the farm.
About the Poet:
Charles Leroy “C. L.” Edson, United States, (1881-1975), was a newspaper columnist, humorist, and poet. He began his journalism career in the mid-west. Edison worked for The Kansas City Star and Times as a reporter and humor columnist for approximately five years. Then he became managing editor of The Tulsa Post from 1909 to 1910. Moving to New York, his work regularly appeared in East Coast papers in the first decades of the 20th century.
Edson also wrote a guide to writing newspaper humor, The Gentle Art of Columning: A Treatise on Comic Journalism (1920), and an autobiography, The Great American Ass (1926). Edson also wrote for several national publications. [DES-01/22]